Saturday, September 27, 2025
Mike Williams - Wrecking Ball (Original Music)
Friday, September 26, 2025
The loss of beauty in our modern world
Thursday, September 25, 2025
Why 71% of Americans Fear Surveillance & Government Lists
Satanic Ritual Abuse
Wednesday, September 24, 2025
Signs Your Body Is Full Of Microplastics
This Sleeping Position Is Blocking Your Circulation
Tuesday, September 23, 2025
James Perloff - A Tale of Two Clint Eastwood Movies

[By James Perloff] Perhaps a better title for this post would have been “A Tale of Two Clint Eastwoods,” but I’m no Eastwood expert. I know he’s done quite a bit of directing as well as acting over recent decades, and I haven’t kept up with his work. That’s because I rarely watch modern films, since Hollywood has gone progressively so dark.
I also acknowledge that some people will bitterly disagree with this article. Tastes vary widely, and that’s why any almost any movie or product on Amazon will have reviews that span the full range of one to five stars. This article is something I would have liked to have written over 30 years ago, but I didn’t have a blog back then—in fact, neither did anyone else.
The post isn’t really just about Clint Eastwood; it’s about the Oscar ceremonies, a topic I’ve written about before—e.g., why James Stewart and It’s a Wonderful Life were snubbed as Best Actor and Picture of 1946; why a dull, lifeless story was named Best Picture of 1947; and the remarkable discrepancies in the way Quo Vadis and Ben-Hur were treated at the Academy Awards for 1951 and 1959. The reasons were always political.
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Secret tunnels beneath Chabad’s Brooklyn headquarters
Americans Are About to Lose Everything - And They Don’t Even Know It
James Corbett - The Criminalization of Justice
Monday, September 22, 2025
Clown World - Charlie Kirk Declared "Man of Steel"
The ChatGPT Messages OpenAI Doesn't Want You to See
AI is now denying your healthcare (and it's getting worse)
Sunday, September 21, 2025
The Chinese Mafia’s Role in America’s Deadly Fentanyl Epidemic
Saturday, September 20, 2025
Who Killed Charlie Kirk? The Wound, The Weapon & Why The Official Lie
How Ancient Forces of Darkness Engineered Modern Society
I Tested Two Privacy Phones for 6 Weeks – Here’s What I Found
Friday, September 19, 2025
Signal Man Behind Charlie Kirk Breaks His Silence
The Cost of Inconvenience - The Societal Impacts of Internet Platforms and Digital Tech
Thursday, September 18, 2025
Dom & Chris Waterson - The Royal Bloodlines of Jane Asher
Who Killed Charlie Kirk? Every Theory Analyzed
5 Unhinged Relics Germany Used to Fight WWII
How Safe Is Your Wallet From Hackers in 2025?
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Christopher Jon Bjerknes - His Alarming Predictions
Tuesday, September 16, 2025
James Perloff - 9/11 Planes Part II: 33 Anomalies

[By James Perloff] This post is a sequel to my “Debunking Myself” post, in which I explain why—based upon accumulated evidence—I abandoned the “no planes” theory of 9/11 and rescinded a theory I had proposed. (A significant number of revisions have since been made to that post.)
However, many anomalies remain concerning 9/11. Although the fiercest controversy continues to swirl about the manner in which the Twin Towers were destroyed, this article will continue to confine focus on the planes and related phenomena. For that reason, this post should be considered a continuation of the previous one. While I do believe that planes were indeed used on 9/11, and that there were flights numbered American 11, United 175, American 77, and United 93, we’ll now proceed to review anomalies that persist with these flights.
My intention here is to present facts as an attorney would in a courtroom. I wish to avoid speculation as much as possible, but where an aberration in the official story occurs, I will sometimes suggest a possible explanation.
Before proceeding, I wish to acknowledge some of the 9/11 researchers who, among many, have helped me over the years:
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James Corbett - NEW DOCUMENTARY - Dissent Into Madness
Monday, September 15, 2025
Zionists began massacring Palestinians 6 months before the Arabs intervened
Sunday, September 14, 2025
DARK WOKE: The Ideology That Hijacked a Generation
Saturday, September 13, 2025
Friday, September 12, 2025
Near Death Epiphanies
Goebbels’ Last Speech in Berlin (1945) | Translated to English
9/11 Foreknowledge and Preplanning
Thursday, September 11, 2025
James Perloff - Here Are My 9/11 Tweets that Twitter/X Suppressed

[Source] Last week, in my post “Yeah, I Got Scammed,” I mentioned that every year, on the anniversary of 9/11, I Tweet out many (100 plus) memes, short videos, and links pertinent to 9/11. The problem is that, starting in 2021, Twitter began an extreme shadowban against me.
According to Microsoft Edge’s AI tool, Copilot, the number of views an un-retweeted Tweet gets should equal about 15-20% of the person’ followers. Screenshot:

Based on this, since I have over 25,400 followers, I should be getting around 4,000 to 5,000 views on average—many more if a posting is retweeted.
However, my un-retweeted Tweets are pretty consistently limited to from 170 to 220 views. In other words, as soon they hit around 200 views, Twitter/X automatically shuts them off, preventing them from being further seen in the feeds of my followers. If they get retweeted by some of the few people who saw them, the views rise, occasionally by a few hundred. This means Twitter/X is acting in bad faith toward their own subscribers, blocking my Tweets for more than 95 percent of the people who requested to follow me. And I believe that X’s algorithm is set so that the only individuals who see my Tweets are people who have few followers, or are shadowbanned themselves. Thus if something I post does gets retweeted, it won’t go far anyway—there will be no ripple effect.
It was the same this year with my 9/11 Tweets. For me, gone are the days of getting hundreds of retweets.
So I’ve decided—even though it’s a week late—to reorganize these 9/11 Tweets into a blog post. At least that way, someone gets to see them. By September of next year, who knows if the Internet will even still be around as we know it?
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Ringo Starr and Come Together

A closer look at the most famous drum fill in the Beatles’ catalog — and why it might not be Ringo playing it.
[Source] Before we get to the Beatles’ most famous drum fill, it’s worth remembering how records were actually made in the ’60s and ’70s — and why what you hear on a record might not be who you think you’re hearing.
1. How the Pros Made the Records You Love
In the 1960s and ’70s, most people imagined their favorite bands walked into the studio, played exactly what ended up on the record, and walked out.
The truth? There was often a quiet “fifth member” in the room — the session player.
Hal Blaine and the Wrecking Crew are the textbook example. When I was learning to play drums and really listening closely, I played along with the Beach Boys’ “I Get Around” because it has a very simple beat and a straightforward snare fill. But it wasn’t just simple — it was tight. Laser-tight. I remember thinking, There’s no way a teenage kid like Dennis Wilson played that cleanly. I vaguely recalled Hal Blaine might’ve been involved — so I looked it up. Sure enough, Blaine played it.
Session drummers like Blaine often had to keep things simple — because the onstage “talent” had to mimic the parts live. But the studio version had to be pistol-hot — punchy, clean, and built for radio.
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Wednesday, September 10, 2025
First Mention of Israel… or the First Zionist Hoax? (Fake History)
Ron Paul - Israel Bombs Hamas Negotiators In Qatar
The Black Sun
Tuesday, September 9, 2025
Monday, September 8, 2025
Sunday, September 7, 2025
Saturday, September 6, 2025
Friday, September 5, 2025
The Internet is Dying: AI, Bots, and The End of Human Content
Is Sturgill Simpson A Paid CIA Asset?

Sturgill Simpson is an American singer-songwriter and actor known for his work in alternative country, progressive country, and outlaw country genres.
[Source] One of the best conspiracy theories in the country music space. I love a good conspiracy theory, from the ones that everyone is familiar with, like the moon landing, to ones specific to a particular fanbase, like the one that claims famed rapper, Tupac, is still alive, and of course, the classic country music theory that Garth Brooks is a serial killer (Where are the bodies, Garth?). A conspiracy theory of any shape or size is going to have my ears perked. And while some are extremely outlandish, some sound rather believable. Hell, some are downright true…
Last week, I mentioned that Wheeler Walker Jr. had been protesting bro country long before Charley Crockett and Gavin Adcock had a falling out, sparking the latest feud in the country genre. While that drama is a separate story, one of our readers reminded us that one of her favorite Wheeler Walker Jr. moments was not him protesting but instead him trying to convince Joe Rogan of a conspiracy theory he has about Sturgill Simpson.
This is a theory that I frankly forgot about, but revisiting the Joe Rogan episode reminded me A) why Wheeler Walker Jr. is a national treasure and B) that this might be one of the best conspiracy theories in country music.
In 2016, Wheeler Walker Jr. appeared on The Joe Rogan Experience and shared that he believes that Sturgill Simpson is a government asset. More specifically, a CIA assassin. He opened up his theory by sharing that he’s a huge fan of Stu, but they were not on speaking terms at the time due to this outlandish theory.
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Thursday, September 4, 2025
REPLAY DOUBLEHEADER - Kaitlyn the Teenage Beatles Researcher + Mark Devlin
Like a Phoenix: The Death and Rebirth of America
Wednesday, September 3, 2025
The Long Tall Sally Test — The Day the Illusion Became Undeniable

By David Peek
The Long Tall Sally Test
Last week, I promised I’d share the moment my faith in the Beatles’ official story began to crack. It didn’t come from some obscure bootleg or a half-baked conspiracy theory. It came from a song I’d known and loved since I was nine years old.
And it came from watching one specific live performance.
Not long after watching Mike Williams’ presentation Did The Beatles Write All Their Own Music? (Apr 2020), I stumbled across a YouTube drummer I respect — Vintage Drummer — covering the Beatles version of Long Tall Sally. His channel is about authenticity, about getting the parts right. For me, his content is superb. So I paid close attention. Vintage Drummer’s playing is immaculate, and his demonstration gave me the perfect laboratory to compare the studio parts with live footage.
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